[Sorry if already posted - but no ref in archives]

http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/books/book_extracts/article1300783.ece.................

How to Live Forever or Die Trying by Bryan Appleyard
Bryan Appleyard explores how science may soon make us able to increase life 
expectancies to well over a hundred, or even a thousand
by Bryan Appleyard 
The Atlanta Braves 


Bruce Klein founded The Immortality Institute (Imminst) in 2002 as a non-profit 
organisation with the aim of 'conquering the blight of involuntary death'. 
Klein was brought up in the town of Americus, 'a jewel of Georgia', in Bible 
Belt America, the deep south. 'Yeah, I'm a southern redneck!' he jokes. His 
family was not especially religious, though he did observe the Catholicism of 
his mother until the age of eleven when he took a phone call from their priest. 
'I said to him I didn't believe any more. He got kind of upset and I hung up 
the phone. It was some kind of visceral thing.' 


Klein was thirty-one when I met him at Imminst's conference at the Georgia Tech 
Conference Center, Atlanta, in November 2005. The conference turned out to be a 
snapshot of the immortalist front line. It is a movement that is part cult and 
part serious science. But all were united by the fervency of their belief in 
the rightness of the project of extending life and by their vehement rejection 
of deathism and scepticism. The participants saw themselves as visionaries and 
frequently beleaguered pioneers of the only new frontier left to mankind. Klein 
is a groomed, fit-looking man. His wife and 'wonderful friend', Susan 
Fonseca-Klein, co-founder and director of the institute, is round-faced and 
pretty. Together, they have the air not of a threateningly glamorous but of a 
consolingly ideal couple - young, healthy, good-natured, extravagantly 
friendly, ambitious, optimistic, glowing. One could imagine them in an 
advertisement for breakfast cereal. 


Most of their work is involved with running Imminst, though Klein does say he 
manages some property and investments. His degree from the University of 
Georgia is in finance. He had just moved from Atlanta to Bethesda, Maryland. He 
is also president of Bethesda-based Novamente, a small firm devoted to the 
construction and commercialisation of the Novamente AI Engine, an 'artifical 
general intelligence oriented software system', and he wished to be closer to 
that project and its presiding thinker Ben Goertzel. 

Goertzel, who was also at the conference, is aggressively scruffy with tangled, 
heavy metal hair and jeans barely clinging to his hips. As he queued to ask a 
question of one of the speakers, I took him for a bum who had wandered in off 
the empty downtown streets and was preparing myself for an embarrassing 
incident culminating in his ejection from the hall. In fact, he was himself a 
speaker and a maths professor, though whatever normality that implies is 
swiftly detonated by the discovery that his first son is named Zarathustra 
Amadeus and his second Zebulon Ulysses. The more restrained Klein is, in spite 
of his wife's protests, putting off having children until he has made the world 
'a safer place', ideally by banishing death. 

Along with increasing numbers of people in the immortality field, Klein 
believes artificial intelligence may be the best way forward, hence his new 
partnership with Goertzel. There are two possibilities arising from AI. Either 
a super-intelligent computer could master the medical problems of human ageing 
that currently baffle us or, more speculatively, we could back-up our 
personalities by downloading them on to such a machine. 

Imminst has been highly successful. It is primarily webbased - you can find it 
at www.imminst.org - and the quality and responsiveness of its site is 
extremely high. The moment I joined, some months before the conference, I was 
(electronically) welcomed by Klein and invited to host a web chat, which I did 
rather sleepily between one and two in the morning. Atlanta is five hours 
behind my house in Stiffkey, Norfolk. ..................cont.





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